1.) Bangladesh has been ravaged by flooding and cyclones in recent years.

2.) Some 30 percent of girls in Bangladesh get married before they turn 15, meaning it has one of the highest rates of child marriage in the world.

What could those two things possibly have in common? They're both the product of climate change.

It might seem crazy, but it's true: Around the world, climate change disproportionately affects people living in poverty, especially poor women and girls. In Bangladesh, for example, big shifts in weather patterns have caused cyclones, flooding, and droughts, forcing families that spent generations farming the countryside to pick up and leave. To survive, they're are forced to relocate to cities to look for work, and families often resort to marrying off their young daughters so they have fewer mouths to feed.

This is the subject of a new mini-documentary from the Thomson Reuters Foundation and TakePart, the digital arm of Participant Media—which is responsible for films like He Named Me Malala and Food, Inc. The project, called Hidden Connections, follows two girls in Bangladesh who are grappling with early marriage after being forced from their homes in the countryside.

Check out the full project here. And if you're inspired to take action on the issue, you can join the social media push leading up to the United Nations Climate Change Conference on November 7.